Rem 870 ejector spring question

I got at Remington 870 express that I just replaced the ejector housing on. The guy got pissed off at it for some reason, threw it down on the ground and it broke the ejector housing. I'm thinking I know why he got pissed at it. It won't eject when rapidly pumped. The gun is chambered for a 3in magnum but I can't even get a spent 2 3/4 to eject. If you eject slowly the hull will come out but it just barley clears the ejection port. If you rapid pump the gun the hull will extract, seems to start to eject but ends up staying in and resting on the carrier. My question is, can I our should I bend the angle of the spring where the hull contacts the spring? Right now its at a 90 degree angle. If I bend it at a say 110 angle where the ejection part of the spring faces more out towards the ejection port, it will delay the ejection just slightly but also increase the angle of ejection. Am I right in thinking this? This is the original spring, I have replacements but they look identical. I'm also going to stiffen up the extractor spring, it seems week and may be part of the problem too.
I believe this is truly a 2 3/4 receiver but he replaced the barrel with a 3in mag barrel. Right now I'm only interested in getting the 2 3/4 hulls to eject.

Its not parts swappen its replacing broken ones. This is the 3rd 870 in a month with a broken ejector housing. The first 2 ejected hulls 4 feet away when done, this one sometimes can't even make it out of the port. I'm not using Win Universals either, I know they are a problem, I got AA and federals I'm testing with. Both do the same thing. I've never had a ejector spring do anything stupid like this.

Nope, original parts. The rivets were finished like the receiver. If they were replaced at any time its quite obvious. Not sure why I care this much about it but I don't want him callen me complaining that it don't eject when I'm sure it didn't before.

What you are describing is almost always the result of a bad extractor or a weak extractor spring, not a bad ejector. Those guns have a bad habit of losing extractors, and they often get replaced with the wrong parts, like a hardware store extractor spring or a piece of nail for a plunger. Replace all three parts and see what happens.

got it all, thanks for the help Jim and Josh. I made a minor fitting adjustment to the extractor and now it at least gets the shells out. Not far but it is consistent and they do make it out every time.

Like most guns except blowbacks, the 870 extractor must not only pull the fired case from the chamber, it must hold onto it while pulling it back against the ejector. If the extractor is not doing its part, it will drop the fired case/shell before it can reach the ejector. That appears to be what is happening in your case. I don't know what "minor adjustment" you have made, but I would replace the extractor, plunger and spring. The three parts cost only about $25, cheap to get a working gun.

Like most guns except blowbacks, the 870 extractor must not only pull the fired case from the chamber, it must hold onto it while pulling it back against the ejector. If the extractor is not doing its part, it will drop the fired case/shell before it can reach the ejector. That appears to be what is happening in your case. I don't know what "minor adjustment" you have made, but I would replace the extractor, plunger and spring. The three parts cost only about $25, cheap to get a working gun.

Jim

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As a retired police armorer......Jim is right. Clean the bolt thoroughly and replace all three parts. Check and de-burr the extractor (if necessary) before instalation. Install the clean and dry bolt. Mike

The Model 870 is notorious for dumping its extractors. The shops where I worked kept a handful of them as well as plungers and springs as replacements since often, the spring and plunger went into the tall grass along with the extractor.

It was pretty common in working on those guns to find that the owner had replaced the extractor, but cheaped out on the spring and plunger, using a hardware store spring and a piece of nail instead. The extractor didn't hold the shell tightly enough, with the results described above.